A very superstitious cat tries to catch Buzzy for breakfast, but Buzzy outsmarts him. Animation by Graham Place and John Walworth. Story by Carl Meyer and Jack Ward. Scenics by Anton Loeb. Music by Winston Sharples. Produced in 1946.

Anyone that has listened to the old radio shows knows that this isn’t any regular toon series. This is Jack Benny in the role of the cat, and the bird’s voice is played by the same voice who played the butler on the Jack Benny show, Ed “Rochester” Anderson.

This fact alone makes this particular cartoon a classic beyond words and an American treasure.

You should Google Jack Benny and listen to some of his shows, the humor is as relevant today as it was then.

Pretty good cartoon for the normally second-rate Famous Studios NOVELTOONS.

Contrary to a below review, the voices in this cartoon were not actually provided by Jack Benny and Rochester. They are distantly similar parodies. Buzzy the Crow’s voice is by Jackson Beck, who was, for years, the voice of Bluto/Brutus in the POPEYE cartoons, in addition to doing countless other cartoon voices and commercial voice-overs until his death in 2004.

I loved this! The animation in this is razor sharp, the plotline, with a wisecracking crow getting the best of a superstitious cat was very well done and the characters were funny. (Buzzy is obviously modeled after Rochester, Jack BennyÃƒ?Ã‚?s sidekick). The animation is so sharp, I thought I was watching a Walt Disney Roger Rabbit thing.

The Paramount/Famous animation studio (the former Fleischer studio) made their best cartoons in the 1940s, of which this entry is among them. After about 1951 or 1952, the Famous stuff goes steadily downhill. The quality of this print is great and has the original Paramount titles at the beginning and end.

This film is the first of the Noveltoons series to feature Buzzy the Crow, which was voiced by Jackson Beck, as a previous reviewer correctly pointed out. Paramount/Famous would continue this series on into the fifties, but like all of the other ‘toons they were doing (including the Popeyes), it became a formula series and quickly fell into a rut.

I saw this cartoon 12-14 years ago when our kids were little and loved it. The audio, music and voices especially of Buzzy the crow. How many old sayings are captured here? It is like a time capsule of 1947, wonderful.

I have to admit I did not know/remember Buzzy but he is a great character and, being black, VERY rarely treated–with out stereotypes or slurs. Myabe his use of the word ‘boss’ is stereotypical but it is clearly a put down of the cat. The openning shot of the cats claws is great, as is his head. This does not have the maniacal energy, frantic pacing, and over-the-top gags that some of the guys at Warners used to turn some of their cartoons into works of Art. But it is a real pleasure to watch. Buzzy’s character makes it *****

Fab little cartoon, which in my humble opinion, is better than most stuff being made in the USA today. Great animation, Great voice-acting, Great plot, Great EVERYTHING!
Too bad snotty animation critics hate Famous Studios.